1991 i Fhe Battalion Ann takes over Photos of inaugural parade See Page 4 e s sev- TO rat- n NFL He led rate of hdown d with fned a nsion ien he in the s actu- a once f to be e is no r those s is Bo aiders, id, 77. dn Duke places l East id Ne- notch, sr los- escap- from *S80- etball 6868, x>ugh 11-0 15- 1 14-1 14-0 13-1 13-2 13- 2 14- 2 12-2 11-2 13- 2 12-3 12-2 10-3 12-1 14- 3 16- 1 8-1 10-3 10- 3 11- 1 12- 3 15- 1 13- 3 10-3 ds IL rf & fol.90 No. 73 GSPS 045360 12 Pages College Station, Texas Wednesday, January 16,1991 Persian Gulf perches on brink jsociated Press The midnight deadline for Iraqi teident Saddam Hussein to pull is forces out of Kuwait passed iednesday and more than 680,000 S. and allied troops began a new juntdown — to war. Barring an attack by Iraq, the start fa Persian Gulf war lay in the sinds of President Bush and allied (jders. Bush, armed with congres- jonal authorization to drive Iraq join Kuwait, was described Tues- Jay as resolute and “at peace with jnself.” (^risisinthe Q ulf ^Bush’s tactics questioned/Page 2 ]Crisis in the Gulf/Page 3 Iraq declared a “furnace of hell” waits anyone trying to dislodge its ;»5,000 troops from Kuwait, taken wer in an Iraqi blitz on Aug. 2. Whal iaddam faced was thousands of mibat aircraft, scores of warships aid some of the world’s most sophts- xated weapons, spearheaded by |!15,000 U.S. troops. The Defense Department said [Iraqi forces in Kuwait were continu- jig to dig in against a multinational kce that included 35,000 troops pm Britain, 10,000 from France, 150.500 from Saudi Arabia and 18.500 from Egypt. The Pentagon iidl/.S. forces ran battle drills and ikw air combat exercises in the iours before the deadline. NBC News said Tuesday night I iiat B-52 bombers had been moved to bases in a gulf country it did not dentify. The Air Force has never tonceded that B-52s have been as signed to Operation Desert Shield, tat a detachment is known to have teen based at Diego Garcia, in the . Indian Ocean. It. Col. Stuart Wagner, a Penta gon spokesman, said he could not See Deadline/Page 8 Student protesters march for peaceful resolution ByJAYME BLASCHKE Of The Battalion Staff Nearly 100 people gathered out side Texas A&M’s Academic Build ing seven hours before the United Nations deadline to protest the use of force to resolve the Persian Gulf Crisis. Chanting “No blood for oil,” and “Peace conference, not war,” the protestors marched across A&M to the corner of University Drive and Texas Avenue, where the Medicine Tribe organized a candlelight vigil. Passing cars honked support for the rally as protesters lined the road side and waved signs with anti-war slogans. The U.N. deadline for Iraq to withdraw from Kuwait was at mid night last night. Susanne Chase, whose brother is stationed in Saudi Arabia, told the crowd the United States had no right to go to war with Iraq. “The politicians in Washington are not representing our interests,” Chase said. “They are going to war with an army that is 65 percent mi nority. The minorities of this coun try are going to suffer the most in any conflict. That is not democracy. “Secretary of State James Baker said Nov. 29 for Iraq to respect the U.N. deadline or risk all,” she said. “I’m saying if the president commits this country to war, Bush will risk all.” Irwin Tang, an organizer of the event, said he supported U.S. troops, and that was why he was pro testing war. “If we let sanctions work, then no Americans will die, but Bush is drag ging this country into war,” Tang said. “Saddam Hussein must be stopped, but not by fighting,” Tang See March/Page 8 Liberty Clinton (left) joined peace marchers in a candlelight vigil at the corner of University and Texas avenues, (below) The marchers were countered by students who support U.S. poli cies. KEVIN IVY/The Battalion ) US. investigates Chinese persecution Student alerts Congress By LYNETTE CLARK Of The Battalion The Chinese eovernment has Begun a new round of perse cution against demonstrators in volved in events lhat led to the Tiananmen Square massacre, a Texas A&M Chinese graduate student told U.S. congression al leaders last week. Ge X u n , a physics graduate student and pres ident of A&M’s China Club, re turned to College Station late Sun day after a week of meetings in Washington, D.C. with Assistant Secretary of State Richard Schifter, MIKE C. MULVEY/The Battalion Ge Xun, a physics graduate student at Texas A&M, holds a picture of his friend and his friend’s wife. Ge recently went to China to help gain his friend’s release from state authorities. congressmen, Chinese student leaders and experts on China. While in the nation’s capital, Ge aid he voiced his concerns about human rights violations now taking place in China. “For so long, they have done nothing, but now that the gulf situa tion is so tense, they want to take this opportunity to finish this business,” Gesaid. Ge went to China last month after reading that a close friend had been arrested for participating in the Tia nanmen Square demonstratihns. “I worked with Wang Juntao for Rvo years at the Institute of Atomic Energy outside Beijing,” Ge said. “I first learned of his arrest when I read a report that included a plea for help from his wife. “We were very good friends, and I felt very deeply that I should go to China to help,” Ge said. In a statement prepared before his departure, Ge said he believes Wang Juntao and other demonstra tors are innocent. “Their behavior did not violate current law in mainland China,” Ge said. “I don’t believe those people wanted to overthrow the govern ment ” Ge “They just wanted to bring some change.” Ge left Dec. 9 for Beijing. Once he arrived, he began his search for in formation about Wang’s case. “Each place I went, they were pre pared for me,” he said. “They gave me no information and would not let me know the truth.” Ge said officials asked him if his friend had been secretly or publicly arrested. “There they admitted they have secret arrests in China,” he said. “They also told me that Wang was probably a political prisoner.” See China/Page 8 A&M students called for duty in Middle East By MIKE LUMAN Of The Battalion Staff Twenty-nine students have withdrawn from Texas A&M af ter being called to active military duty in the Middle East, accord ing to the latest University fig ures. Lt. Col. Donald Johnson, assis tant commandant of the Corps of Cadets, said the 29 students in Saudi Arabia are members of U.S. reserve units, and more de partures can be expected. About one-fourth of the stu dents called to active duty are members of the Corps, he said. Pegi Morgan with Student Ju dicial Programs, the office that handles withdrawals for the Uni versity, said all the students called are men. She said six of the 29 reservists are graduate students, 10 are se niors, four are juniors, seven are sophomores and two are fresh men. Students leaving the University for military obligations must bring copies of their military or ders to the Student Judicial Pro grams office. Other than that, the withdra wal process is the same as for any student, Morgan said. Johnson said it will be difficult to communicate with an individ ual in the Middle East unless that person left a specific address. “We don’t have any idea where all of them are, maybe friends or a family member would know,” he said. “That’s all I could sug gest.” The Aggie Mom’s clubs in Texas urge anyone with the Mid dle East address of an Aggie listed here or a former student on See Reservists/Page 8 Inauguration ‘91 Richards reaffirms ethics vow. heralds start of ‘ AUSTIN (AP) — Democrat Ann Richards, sworn in Tuesday as Texas’ 45th governor, said her ad ministration would be one for the history books. “Today, the historians will record that a new administration, different from any in the past, began,” Rich ards told cheering supporters after being sworn in to succeed retiring Republican Bill Clements. “The people of Texas are back, and they’re waiting, and they’re watching us,” she said. The Department of Public Safety estimated that 15,000 to 20,000 peo ple blanketed the Capitol lawn to watch Richards become the first woman governor since Miriam “Ma” Ferguson left the office in 1935. Richards was frequently inter rupted by cheers and applause as she sounded the “new Texas” theme she used to launch her campaign in June 1989. “Twenty or 50 or 100 years from now, school children are going to open their textbooks — or perhaps switch on their video texts — and they’re going to see a picture,” she said. “They will see us standing proudly on this bright winter noon. And looking through the eyes of a child, we will seem as distant and an cient as portraits of our ancestors seem to us. “Today, we have a vision of a a new Texas’ □ Inauguration celebrations/Page 7 □ Pictorial coverage/Page 4 Texas where opportunity knows no race, no gender, no color — a glimpse of the possibilities that can happen in government if we simply open the doors and let the people in. Tomorrow, we have to build that Texas. Richards took the oath of office under a clear sky shortly after noon. It was administered "by Texas Su preme Court Chief Justice Tom Phillips. Representatives of 35 for eign countries and the four Mexican states that border the United States also attended, officials said. Wearing a white suit, Richards waved both arms over her head as the crowd cheered. Richards, a former school teacher, said the new Texas would put a pre mium on schools, making sure every child receives an education that “al lows them to claim the full promise of their lives.” She said state government must act in a manner “where every deci sion is measured against the high standard of ethics and true commit ment to the public trust.” Repairs close Ross Street Ross Street will be closed for an indefinite period of time between Spence and Bizzell streets beginning today. Adverse weather conditions during Christmas break delayed pave ment repairs by the Texas A&M Physical Plant. Tom Williams, director of Parking, Transit and Traffic Services, says on-campus shuttle bus routes along Ross Street will be modified to run around the perimeter of campus. Any changes with bus routes will be posted for commuters.